Impact of the Duration of Antibiotics on Clinical Events in Patients With Pseudomonas Aeruginosa Ventilator-associated Pneumonia (iDIAPASON) (iDIAPASON)

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Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) accounts for 25% of infections in intensive care units (Réseau RAISIN 2012). A short duration (8 days; SD) vs. long duration (15 days; LD) of antibiotic therapy has a comparable clinical efficacy with less antibiotic use and less multidrug-resistant pathogens (MDR) emergence. These results have led the American Thoracic Society to recommend SD therapy for VAP, with the exception of documented VAP of non-fermenting Gram negative bacilli (NF-GNB), including Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA-VAP), due to the absence of studies focusing specifically on PA-VAP. Thus the beneficial effect of SD therapy in PA-VAP is still a matter of debate. In a small (n=127) subgroup analysis, a higher rate of recurrence with SD therapy (n=21, 32.8%) has been observed compared with LD therapy group (n=12, 19.0%). Unfortunately, the definition of recurrence was essentially based on microbiological rather than clinical data, and the higher rate of recurrence observed could rather reflect a higher rate of colonization more than a new infection.

Interestingly, a trend for a lower rate of mortality was also observed in the SD group (n=15, 23.4%) compared with the LD group (n=19, 30.2%), but this study was clearly underpowered to detect a difference of mortality between groups.

The two strategies were considered as not different, for the risk of mortality in a recent meta-analysis, performed on the very few available studies (n=2), that (OR = 1.33, 95% CI [0.33 to 5.26] for SD vs. LD strategies respectively). However, this conclusion remains questionable considering the large confidence interval of the risk and the power of these studies.

Primary objective and assessment criterion: To assess the non-inferiority of a short duration of antibiotics (8 days) vs. prolonged antibiotic therapy (15 days) in P. aeruginosa ventilator-associated pneumonia (PA-VAP) on a composite end-point combining Day-90 mortality and PA-VAP recurrence rate during hospitalization in the ICU.

Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the ICU, accounting for 25% of infections in intensive care units (Réseau RAISIN 2012). From 1975 to 2003, the incidence of hospital-acquired pneumonia caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) has almost doubled, from 9.6% to 18.1%. In a US national large-scale survey, PA was the most frequently isolated gram-negative aerobic bacterium from ICUs (23%) and also the most frequent bacterium isolated from the respiratory tract (31.6%).

PA-VAP is associated with a high mortality ranging from 40% up to 69%, and with high rates of recurrence despite adequate antimicrobial therapy. In a large randomized trial regarding the optimal duration of antibiotic therapy in overall VAPs, the rate of recurrence among the subgroup of non-fermenting Gram negative bacilli (NF-GNB) documented VAP varied between 19.0% and 32.8%, according to the randomization arm. Finally, a recently published cohort about 393 PA-VAP in 314 patients, the composite criteria failure treatment (death and recurrence) occured in 112 cases (28.5%).

Hypothesis A short duration antibiotherapy (8 days) vs. long duration antibiotherapy (15 days) in treatment of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (PA-VAP) is safe and not associated with an increased mortality or recurrence rate of PA-VAP.

The demonstration of this hypothesis could lead to decrease antibiotic exposure during the hospitalization in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and in turn reduce the acquisition and the spread of multidrug-resistant pathogens (MDR).

Antibiotic therapy Antibiotic treatment should be started just after realization of bacteriological sampling, without waiting for the result. The choice of initial antibiotic therapy will be left to the discretion of the physician but will be essentially based on the clinical context, previously antibiotic therapy, the presence or absence of risk factors for MDR (antibiotics or hospitalization in previous 90 days, current hospitalization ≥ 5 days, MV ≥ 5 days, supported in a dialysis center or residency in a nursing home), local epidemiological data, and finally if the patient is already known as being colonized by a MDR. Investigators would be strongly encouraged to convert this initial regimen into a narrow- spectrum therapy, based on culture results.

All antibiotics would be withdrawn, either at the end of day 8 or day 15, according to the randomization assignment, except those prescribed for a documented pulmonary infection recurrence before that day.

An algorithm for the initial prescription of antibiotics will be established in each ICU, the algorithm will be adapted whenever necessary to changes in the local ecology.

Antibiotic treatment should be started just after realization of bacteriological sampling, and then converted into a narrow-spectrum therapy, based on culture results, for a total duration of effective antibiotic therapy against PA of 8 days.

Antibiotic treatment should be started just after realization of bacteriological sampling, and then converted into a narrow-spectrum therapy, based on culture results, for a total duration of effective antibiotic therapy against pseudomona aeruginosa of 8 days.

Sham Comparator: 15 days of effective antibiotic treatment

Antibiotic treatment should be started just after realization of bacteriological sampling, and then converted into a narrow-spectrum therapy, based on culture results, for a total duration of effective antibiotic therapy against PA of 15 days.

Antibiotic treatment should be started just after realization of bacteriological sampling, and then converted into a narrow-spectrum therapy, based on culture results, for a total duration of effective antibiotic therapy against pseudomona aeruginosa of 15 days.

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Immunocompromised patients (HIV, immunosuppressive therapy, corticosteroids> 0.5 mg / kg per day for more than a month)

Patients receiving antibiotic therapy for extrapulmonary infection

Patients in whom a procedure of withdrawing life-sustaining treatment has been established

Pregnancy

Patients included in another interventional study

Chronic pulmonary colonization with Pseudomonas aeruginosa: patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) or bronchiectasis, with a positive respiratory sample at infra threshold rate for Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ie<103 CFUs/mL for protected specimen brush or <106 CFUs/mL for tracheal aspirate), obtained in the absence of pneumonia or exacerbation during the 6 months before the ICU admission.